You can use ssh + sshfs. Any reason not to?
–
nickguletskiiNov 14 '12 at 15:47

I hadn't tested this out, but you should be able to put the workspace into Ubuntu One or Dropbox and work with that, it shouldn't cause any issues as long as only one machine is opening the same workspace at the same time. Although you might want to cherry pick the folders which get synchronized and which ones don't or you might be using up more bandwidth/disk space than you really need.
–
Lie RyanNov 14 '12 at 15:49

@LieRyan I might have to go with that option. It doesn't seem as if eclipse can switch into a remote workspace that's 'just' being accessed over ssh.
–
FSchmidtNov 14 '12 at 16:49

While sshfs or gvfs should work as well because those access method are transparent, i.e. eclipse would not be able to distinguish files accessed over sshfs or gvfs from local files. The reason I generally avoid doing that for complex apps like eclipse is that eclipse probably aren't designed with the latency profile of sshfs/gvfs (high latency, in the range of 200-1000milliseconds) vs local hard disk (comparatively much lower latency, in the range of microseconds), and some programs may be excessively slower when accessing files over remote mounted disk.
–
Lie RyanNov 15 '12 at 6:22

1 Answer
1

If you want to get into a remote box the best method I know of is using SSH/SFTP.

Inside nautilus you can mount a drive as if it was a local drive and once you do that you could potentially open up an Eclipse project.

If it is on your local LAN you could maybe even do FTP instead since it would be faster, but I usually just stick with SFTP since it is fast enough for me when ever I need to work with a project even on a remote system several hundred miles away.

Here is a link on how to install an SSH server on what ever system is hosting the files.

The ip address should be the local LAN address if your working that way if not you might need to work with your router.

You can also now mount easily with nautilus if you open a nautilus window and click connect to server.

If you plan on running this all the time you might need to consult some security manuals. I am not a security expert and I use this setup only locally.

Good luck, hope this helps.

UPDATE
If you want to edit something remotely with Eclipse that isn't really a Ubuntu/Linux question, but its easy enough to do from what I have read. I don't personally use Eclipse for this because I prefer Netbeans.

" once you do that you could potentially open up an Eclipse project" - that is exactly my question. is there a way to (1) open Eclipse on the remote machine and manipulate workspace / projects from within there or (2) run Eclipse on my machine then ssh into the remote workspace to manipulate it there?
–
FSchmidtNov 14 '12 at 16:16